World Flags

A flag is used symbolically for signaling or identification. The first flags were used to help with military coordination on the battlefields. The most popular uses of a flag is to symbolize a nation or country. National flags are patriotic symbols with varying interpretations, often including strong military associations due to their original and ongoing military uses. The study of flags is known as vexillology meaning flag or banner. Flags were most certainly invented in India and China. The shape of range from square, triangular, or swallow tailed, with the most common being the rectangular.

Flags authenticate claims, dramatize political demands, establish a common framework within which cooperating nations are willing to work out mutually agreeable solutions; or, postulate and maintain irreconcilable differences that prevent agreements from taking place.

It is now almost impossible for our world or human society to be without flags.

Flags constitute an explicit self-analysis by nation-states; so, vexillology may justify a claim to being an important aspect of the understanding of global societies and their flags.

Since flags are flown on ships and buildings, flags are hoisted in battle and on mountaintops, flags are carried to the Olympic Games and to outer space, and flags are flaunted in sports events and in political rallies; flags of the world have become the primary symbols of our modern age.

To understand the significance of a flag, one must appreciate a flag's historical development, because the colors and designs (flag art) of national flags are usually not arbitrarily selected.

Many flags can be traced to a common origin, and such "flag families", linked both by tradition and by geography, are the basis for existing world flags.

Both heraldry and vexillology have specialized terminology that is useful in making technical descriptions and such vexillological terms may be seen at this special list of vexillarium.

The study of flags and state heraldry is by no means a matter only of dusty achieves, long forgotten heroes, and incidents.

These flag symbols reflect political realities as well as changes that are as profound as nation-states themselves.

Some countries have two flags, one known as the government or state flag and the other known as the national flag.

The state flag is flown over government buildings and embassies in foreign countries; while the national flag is usually one of the flags flown by private citizens.

Some countries have more than one "national flag"; a few countries have as many as four or five different flag designs serving as a national flag under different circumstances.

Just bear in mind that vexillology, or the study of flags, is becoming much more significant than you might have assumed.